EURANET – The European Radio Network

Euranet, the new European radio network, adds colour and motion to the
European media. Euranet is a pan-European consortium made up of 16
international, national and regional radio stations from 13 EU member
states. The network partners co-produce and transmit programs on European
issues, from a European, transnational perspective. Alongside a
multilingual, interactive website, which will be launched in summer 2008,
Euranet’s broadcasts will stimulate communication between Europeans.
Radio Prague is taking part in the project. Stories produced for the
network are broadcast by partner stations all over Europe. A selection of
them can be found on these pages.

The first German speakers settled in the Czech lands in the 13th century,
and in the interwar period there were around three million ethnic Germans
in Czechoslovakia. That changed completely after World War II, when almost
all of them were forcibly expelled from the country. Now, however, their
history is being reclaimed – with plans to open the first museum in the
Czech Republic dedicated to the country’s former German minority. Radio
Prague's Ian Willoughby reports.

Listen:

Tiger Lillies perform special bi-lingual show in Prague

[2010-10-03] Ian Willoughby

The award-winning British cabaret group the Tiger Lillies premiered a new
show in Prague on Sunday night. They have been popular with Czech audiences
for many years, but the theatre piece “Here I Am Human!” represents a
departure for the band in that it is in both English and Czech, a language
the Tiger Lillies don’t understand. Radio Prague’s Ian Willoughby

More than 2,000 astronauts, engineers and scientists are currently rubbing
shoulders at the Prague Congress Centre, for the annual International
Astronautical Congress. The meeting, being held here for the first time
since 1977, covers subjects as diverse as the future of the International
Space Station and whether there’s life on Mars. Radio Prague's Rob
Cameron reports.

Listen:

New Czech government appointed

[2010-07-14] Ian Willoughby

A new three-party coalition government was appointed in the Czech Republic
on Tuesday, bringing to an end a prolonged period of political instability
in the country. The centre-right cabinet has an unusually strong majority,
and has pledged to carry out deep reforms and fight corruption. But how
long can the new government remain united? Radio Prague’s Ian Willoughby
reports.

Listen:

Highly-anticipated new film by Alice Nellis premieres in Czech cinemas

[2010-04-15] Jan Velinger

This week saw the opening in the Czech Republic of a highly-anticipated new
film called Mamas & Papas by respected Czech director Alice Nellis. Ms
Nellis, whose previous films include Little Girl Blue and Some Secrets
(which received a measure of international attention) decided in her latest
feature to examine the lives of four couples, whose stories revolve around
the difficult decision of whether to have – or not have – a child.
Radio Prague’s Jan Velinger looks at the film and the director’s
approach.

Listen:

Prague's One World film fest turns spotlight on human rights

[2010-03-23] Ian Willoughby

Since the One World international festival of human rights documentaries
was first held in Prague 13 years ago, it has grown to become the largest
event of its kind in Europe. This year it screened over 100 films from 30
countries all around the world, with subjects ranging from land seizure in
Zimbabwe to Russia’s neo-Nazis to Muslim punks in the United States.
Radio Prague’s Ian Willoughby reports from the One World festival.

Listen:

NGOs seek to return original spirit to Communist sullied Women's Day

[2010-03-23] Christian Falvey

Monday is International Women’s Day, and in 2010 that means one hundred
years since the holiday was introduced. The idea to highlight the struggle
for women’s rights around the world picked up a different tone in
communist countries like Czechoslovakia though, and was largely discarded
after 1989. Now some NGOs in the Czech Republic want to use the 100th
anniversary to reawaken the spirit of activism that Women’s Day
originally stood for. Radio Prague's Christian Falvey reports.

Old TV news has been in the news recently here in the Czech Republic.
Michael Kocáb, the human rights minister, has slammed the public
broadcaster Czech TV for showing daily bulletins from the communist era. It
is the same, he says, as if German TV showed Nazi-era news in the 1960s.
Radio Prague's Sarah Borufka reports.

Listen:

Czech underground legends Plastic People of Universe return with first album in decade

[2010-01-22] Ian Willoughby

The Plastic People of the Universe – one of the most important bands ever
to come out of the former Eastern Bloc – are back with a new album. The
imprisonment of the underground group inspired the dissidents who later led
Czechoslovakia’s Velvet Revolution. But all along the Plastic People have
insisted they just want to play their music. They discussed their new
release with Radio Prague’s Ian Willoughby.

Listen:

Prague conference contributes to reshaping NATO strategy

[2010-01-13] Chris Johnstone

The world’s most powerful military alliance, NATO, is in the middle of a
far reaching and overdue rethink of its strategy. Former US Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright is leading a group tasked with pointing the way.
She and other members of the group were in the Czech capital Prague on
Tuesday to collect input and give some pointers where the process is
heading. Radio Prague’s Chris Johnstone reports.